Tracing Your Mississippi Ancestors

Tracing Your Mississippi Ancestors
Author: Anne S. Lipscomb
Publisher: Univ. Press of Mississippi
Total Pages: 212
Release: 2009-10-20
Genre: Reference
ISBN: 1604736984

This easy-to-understand guide through a maze of research possibilities is for any genealogist who has Mississippi ancestry. It identifies the many official state records, incorporated community records, related federal records, and unofficial documents useful in researching Mississippi genealogy. Here the contents of these resources are clearly described, and directions for using them are clearly stated. Tracing Your Mississippi Ancestors also introduces many other helpful genealogical resources, including detailed colonial, territorial, state, and local materials. Among official records are census schedules, birth, marriage, divorce, and death registers, tax records, military documents, and records of land transactions such as deeds, tract books, land office papers, plats, and claims. In addition to noting such frequently used sources as Confederate Army records, this guidebook leads the researcher toward lesser-known materials, such as passenger lists from ships, Spanish court records, midwives' reports, WPA county histories, cemetery records, and information about extinct towns. Since researching forebears who belong to minority groups can be a difficult challenge, this book offers several avenues to discovering them. Of special focus are sources for locating African American and Native American ancestors. These include slave schedules, Freedman's Bureau papers, Civil War rolls, plantation journals, slave narratives, Indian census records, and Indian enrollment cards. To these specialized resources the authors of Tracing Your Mississippi Ancestors append an annotated bibliography of published and unpublished genealogical materials relating to Mississippi. Including over 200 citations, this is by far the most comprehensive list ever given for researching Mississippi genealogy. In addition, all of Mississippi's local, county, and state repositories of genealogical materials are identified, but because most documents for tracing Mississippi ancestors are found at the Mississippi Department of Archives and History, the authors have made the state archival collection in Jackson the focus of this book.

MacRaes to America!!

MacRaes to America!!
Author: Cornelia Wendell Bush
Publisher: Cornelia Wendell Bush
Total Pages: 640
Release: 2006
Genre: Reference
ISBN: 9781597150255

Persons with the surname McRae, or several variations thereof, are listed by state. Information was taken mainly from U.S. censuses from 1790 to 1850.

Red Book

Red Book
Author: Alice Eichholz
Publisher: Ancestry Publishing
Total Pages: 812
Release: 2004
Genre: Reference
ISBN: 9781593311667

" ... provides updated county and town listings within the same overall state-by-state organization ... information on records and holdings for every county in the United States, as well as excellent maps from renowned mapmaker William Dollarhide ... The availability of census records such as federal, state, and territorial census reports is covered in detail ... Vital records are also discussed, including when and where they were kept and how"--Publisher decription.

Genealogy and History of the Friday Families from Switzerland, Colonial and Southern America, 1535-2003

Genealogy and History of the Friday Families from Switzerland, Colonial and Southern America, 1535-2003
Author: J. S. Friday
Publisher:
Total Pages: 440
Release: 2003
Genre: South Carolina
ISBN: 0595298966

"In the mid 1730's the Frydig's/Fridig's left Switzerland ... Two families arrived in South Carolina in 1735 ... This book will document the early settlers in South Carolina and follow [the Friday name] to Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas, Texas, Oklahoma and California."--Introduction.

Our Monts Family

Our Monts Family
Author: William Howard Wright
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1120
Release: 1990
Genre: South Carolina
ISBN:

John Casper Mantz (b.ca. 1715) immigrated in 1752 from either Germany or Switzerland to Charleston, South Carolina, and was granted land on the Edisto River in Berkley above Orangeburg in Berkely County, South Carolina. He had married Anna Barbara Amacher, who had immigrated with her father in 1736, and then returned to Europe to marry John Casper Mantz and immigrate to Charleston as part of his family. There was another John Casper Mantz who immigrated to Charleston in 1752, although on another ship; the author carefully details the differing genealogical data about the two. Descendants and relatives lived in South Carolina, Florida, Mississippi, Tennessee, Kansas, Arkansas, Texas and elsewhere. Includes ancestral family history and genealogical data in France, Luxembourg, Germany, Switzerland and elsewhere to 804 A.D.